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Building A Hedged Portfolio Around A Position In Novo Nordisk

Summary One of the more appealing stocks to consider as part of a concentrated portfolio is Novo Nordisk, the leading diabetes care and biopharmaceutical company. We review some reasons why Novo Nordisk is appealing, and discuss how an investor can include it in a concentrated portfolio, while limiting his risk and maximizing expected return. We recap the method, show how you can build a concentrated hedged portfolio yourself, and present a sample hedged portfolio built around Novo Nordisk. The sample portfolio is designed for someone with $80,000 to invest, who wants to limit his risk to a drawdown of no more than 18%. The sample portfolio has a negative hedging cost. The Number One Stock In the World Part of the attraction of Seeking Alpha articles is often the comments they generate. In the latest installment of his series on his top investments (“The #1 Stock In the World, Part II”), hedge fund manager and Seeking Alpha contributor Chris DeMuth, Jr. named Ocean Shore (OCSH) as his current favorite. In a comment on that article, his fellow Seeking Alpha contributor Harm Elderman offered an intriguing alternative selection for that title, Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO ), and added: “It’s been my largest share of my portfolio for over 8 years and every year it’s been an incredible cash cow (as it has been all the years before and will be in the future). Seriously, take a look. This firm has bent some stock market rules (in my view) over the last 25 years in regards of risk/reward profile.” The Appeal of NVO Although DeMuth aims to “sift the world”, it’s understandable that he can’t cover every promising stock. At the same time, a closer look at NVO illuminates the appeal it has had for Elderman and many other investors. (click to enlarge) Riding a global mega trend Although Novo Nordisk is active in other areas such as growth hormone treatments, it remains a leading manufacturer of diabetes medications, such as the NovoLog FlexPen prefilled insulin syringe, pictured above. Diabetes is a global epidemic: according to the World Health Organizaton, as of 2014, 9% of the world’s adult population was estimated to suffer from the disease. The International Diabetes Foundation’s Diabetes Atlas estimates the total number of diabetes cases globally is 387 million. By way of comparison, the WHO estimates there are 37 million patients in the world living with HIV. The scale of the diabetes epidemic, and Novo Nordisk’s 90-year history in diabetes treatment, provides some context to the remarkable long-term chart of the company’s shares: (click to enlarge) Not only does the scale of diabetes dwarf that of HIV and AIDS (fewer than half of those infected with HIV currently suffer from AIDS), but the epidemic is expected to grow considerably over the next two decades. The Diabetes Atlas estimates 592 million people will be living with the disease in 2035. Selected Fundamentals Novo Nordisk shares aren’t cheap on an absolute basis – according to Fidelity’s data, the current PEG ratio for the stock (using 5-year earnings growth projections) is 1.97, while a PEG ratio of 2 or greater is often considered to be high. However, the average PEG ratio for the pharmaceutical industry is 4.13. Particularly striking, though, are the company’s returns on sales, equity, assets, and investment, as shown below (image via Fidelity). (click to enlarge) Equity Summary Score Fidelity aggregates opinions on stocks from multiple research shops and weights each opinion by the historical accuracy of the researchers. It then consolidates that data into an “equity summary score”, on a scale from 1 to 10, with 10 being the most bullish. As the image below shows, the current equity summary score for NVO is very bullish. Building a Hedged Portfolio Around an NVO Position Given the appeal of NVO, why consider hedging it? For two reasons: Any stock may be subject to unpredictable, idiosyncratic risk. For a recent example , consider the emissions scandal at Volkswagen ( OTCQX:VLKAY ). All stocks are subject to market risk: in the event of a major market correction, all stocks are likely to plummet. You could simply buy and hedge NVO, and we’ll show a sample hedge for it below, but the benefits of the hedged portfolio method are that it can lower your overall hedging cost and let you maximize your expected return. So, we’ll use NVO as starting point and show how you can build a hedged portfolio around it for an investor who is unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 18%, and has $80,000 that he wants to invest. First, though, let’s address the issue of risk tolerance, and how it affects potential return. Risk Tolerance and Potential Return All else equal, with a hedged portfolio, the greater an investor’s risk tolerance, the greater the maximum drawdown he is willing to risk (his “threshold”, in our terminology) and the higher his potential return will be. So, we should expect that an investor who is willing to risk a 28% decline will have a chance at higher potential returns than one who is only willing to risk an 8% drawdown. In our example, we’ll be splitting the difference and using an 18% threshold. Constructing A Hedged Portfolio We’ll outline the process here briefly, and then explain how you can implement it yourself. Finally, we’ll present an example of a hedged portfolio that was constructed this way with an automated tool. The process, in broad strokes, is this: Find securities with promising potential returns (we define potential return as a high-end, bullish estimate of how the security will perform). Find securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. Buy a handful of securities that score well on the first two criteria; in other words, buy a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs (or, ones with high net potential returns). Hedge them. The potential benefits of this approach are twofold: If you are successful at the first step (finding securities with high potential returns), and you hold a concentrated portfolio of them, your portfolios should generate decent returns over time. If you are hedged, and your return estimates are completely wrong, on occasion – or the market moves against you – your downside will be strictly limited. How to Implement This Approach Finding promising stocks In this case, we’ve got one promising stock already, NVO. To find others, you can use Seeking Alpha Pro , among other sources. To quantify potential returns for these stocks, you can use analysts’ consensus price targets for them, to calculate potential returns in percentage terms. For example, via Nasdaq’s website , the image below shows the sell-side analysts’ consensus 12 month price target for NVO as of October 9th, 2015: Since NVO closed at $54.61 on October 9th, the consensus price target suggests a 16.4% potential return over 12 months. In general, though, you’ll need to use the same time frame for each of your potential return calculations to facilitate comparisons of potential returns, hedging costs, and net potential returns. Our method starts with calculations of six-month potential returns. Finding inexpensive ways to hedge these securities Whatever hedging method you use, for this example, you’d want to make sure that each security is hedged against a greater-than-18% decline over the timeframe covered by your potential return calculations (our method attempts to find optimal static hedges using collars as well as protective puts going out approximately six months). And you’ll need to calculate your cost of hedging as a percentage of position value. Select the securities with highest, or at least positive, net potential returns When starting from a large universe of securities, you’d want to select the ones with the highest potential returns, net of hedging costs, but, at a minimum, you’d want to at least want to exclude any security that has a negative potential return net of hedging costs. It doesn’t make sense to pay X to hedge a stock if you estimate the stock will return

Faltering Thursday – Here Come Those Tears Again

Summary The S&P is still knocking on that 2,000 line. Our Option Opportunity Portfolio ends month 2 up 15.1%. A quick review and a look at a couple of trade ideas we’re still hot on. And the struggle continues. As you can see from Dave Fry’s SPY chart, this is the worst kind of ” rally ” where we get big volume sell-offs followed by low-volume, bot-driven pump jobs aimed to sucker the retailers into buying the dips so the guys driving the tradebots can dump more shares on them. Wash, rinse and repeat until the big boys are all cashed out (we already are!) and then they pull the rug out and crash the market . The crashing part will be easy – all they have to do is not prop it up but, for good measure, ” THEY ” can always send their minions out to TV stations with a few well-placed downgrades to really send things into a tailspin. Suddenly, Russia bombing Turkey Syria, China’s collapsing economy, Europe’s slow economy, the refugee crisis, Fed raising rates, terrible US Jobs and Manufacturing numbers, Brazil or Venezuela’s collapsing economies, Greece (again) or even our Debt Ceiling (again) will suddenly matter and the markets will quickly drop 10%. I was on Benzinga’s Pre-Market Show yesterday morning talking about my value reasons for being short up here (S&P 2,000): It’s not that we’re all bearish – we have a lot of material stocks and our portfolios are at record highs this week so THANK YOU manipulators – it’s just that we think the stocks we already cashed out of have further to fall before they are ” correctly priced ” – like the many material stocks we stuck with when we cashed out the rest. Having a materials-heavy portfolio this past week turned out to be the perfect way to play this bounce. In fact, today is the end of month 2 for our Option Opportunities Portfolio over at Seeking Alpha, where our goal is to make $5,000 a month (5%) in a $100,000 portfolio and I’m very happy to say that our closed positions are, in fact, up $14,905 (14.9%) after 60 days: (click to enlarge) As you can see, we only had to close 12 positions, averaging better than $1,000 per position with an average hold time of just over 2 weeks but, as we do that, we’ve been putting some of our profits back into longer-term positions that are much more relaxing to manage but still give us those great monthly returns. If you are interested in this kind of trading, you can check out our open positions by signing up here and, if you don’t like our strategy after looking – SA has a generous satisfaction guarantee. (click to enlarge) One of our long positions, Lumber Liquidators (NYSE: LL ) is going to be having a good day as they settled up with the justice department over their importation of wood that violated EPA standards by paying a $10M fine . “Ow, my wrist” said a LL spokesman! This fine is NOT related to their flooring issues but it lets investors know that fears of fines that break the company are almost certainly unfounded (which was our investing premise back on 9/25). The stock should be up 10% this morning so even if you didn’t use our option play – which is on the way to a 100% gain – it’s still a pretty good return for 2 weeks, right? This is what we mean by ” Option Opportunities ” – we seek out mispriced stocks and then use options to make hedged and leveraged bets to take advantage of the situation. You can always just play the stock – but it’s way more fun with options! Our OOP Members also have access to our Live Weekly Webinars (Tuesday’s 1pm, EST) and you can view a replay of this week’s here , where we had a wide-reaching conversation about the current market situation and our featured trade idea was for NLY – which then did this: (click to enlarge) We’re value investors and that means we know how to find opportunities in any kind of market – even the ones we’d rather not play in like this one. Still, my overriding concern about the S&P’s ability to take out the 2,000 line is keeping us ” Cashy and Cautious ” in our 4 Member Portfolios, as we wait to see how the situation resolves itself. As I noted at Benzinga yesterday, I think we fail here and leg back down to 1,850 but that is good and health and we’ll be happy to do a bit more buying down there (we already have an offer on AAPL at around $100, but using short put options to drop our net entry to $75). As we come into earnings season, there are going to be tons of fun short-term trades we can take. Just yesterday we did a hedged short on Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ) for our OOP and our short play on oil using the Ultra-ETF (NYSEARCA: SCO ) is going well as yesterday’s inventories were a bust. There’s always something to trade – that’s why we have no fear keeping our portfolios 90% in cash – if we can make 15% in 2 months using just 10% of our cash – why risk exposing ourselves to the downside?